->''"Ethan has spent the last ten years doing incredibly stupid and dangerous things, with very little consequence. The end of him had to be, ultimately, a result of his own doing."''-->-- '''Tim Buckley''', ''Webcomic/CtrlAltDel''

[[Series/TheTwilightZone1959 Imagine, if you will,]] that a character does something despicable or foolish. Perhaps they were acting in an immoral way; perhaps they merely dared to rally against fate / the gods / the futility of existence / their own humanity. Whatever the reason, the universal kismet doesn't like it, so something totally unexpected but poetically just happens at the end to drive the lesson home, hard. Such endings are ''all but'' explicitly moralistic; it isn't enough for the universe to bring a situation to a just resolution, it has to resolve the situation in such a way as to both reveal what the moral of the story is and "demonstrate" the correctness of that lesson. This is a Karmic Twist Ending -- a TwistEnding designed to force AnAesop.

Much of the power of this trope derives from the twist at the end; it isn't merely unexpected, but it suddenly puts established plot elements into an entirely new light, revealing them to be loaded with new meaning via the connection to the aesop. Sometimes these connections are causal or logical, and sometimes they're merely metaphorical. Such a sudden shift of meaning is essential to the trope.

Examples:* A CorruptCorporateExecutive makes a huge deal via unethical tactics... But it turns out that [[DealWithTheDevil the deal was with the devil]], and he's just lost his soul.* A guy comes across a device that [[TimeStandsStill stops time]] and uses it to make himself rich, [[PowerPerversionPotential spy on the girls' locker room]], etc... [[PhlebotinumBreakdown But it breaks]], [[AndIMustScream stranding him in stopped-time]].* A diminutive, mean-spirited, cheating jockey wishes he wasn't so short, and his wish is granted... [[LiteralGenie Turning him into a 10-foot tall freak who can't ride horses any more]].[[note]]This is the plot of ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'' episode "[[Recap/TheTwilightZoneS5E125TheLastNightOfAJockey The Last Night of a Jockey]]".[[/note]]

Whatever the case, the ending always makes the lesson to be learned abundantly clear in the end.

It's worth noting that when many people claim that a situation is an instance of '{{irony}}', they mean that this trope seems to apply to it. Often this usage is applied to actual situations, and denoting this trope with '{{irony}}' is one of the most familiar ways to apply the comfortable sense of narrative closure found in fiction to real life. Some who are supposed to know about this sort of thing think that this is an incorrect usage of the term, and the rest are familiar with the term "situational irony".

Compare EarthAllAlong, TomatoSurprise, FawltyTowersPlot, and CruelTwistEnding. When this trope is only used in an adaptation while being absent in the source material, it's AdaptationalKarma.

As this is an Ending Trope, '''beware of spoilers'''.

----!!Examples:

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[[folder:Anime and Manga]]* ''Anime/HellGirl'' is fond of Twist tropes, here are a few. In this show, if you send someone to hell, you will go to hell when you die.** An episode where a girl becomes extremely bitter at her teacher. He reads one of her notes aloud and blames someone who wasn't involved for it as well, writing it down in his book (which he claims goes on their permanent record). She starts to believe that he's just trying to mess with people and talks about rumors of him ruining people's opportunities to get into good highschools. She listens to her MP3 player in class and he takes it and writes it down. She comes back for it and he tells her he threw it away. She sends him to hell. [[spoiler: Afterward, her friend runs up to give her her MP3 player back, saying that the teacher told her he was just joking and he would eventually give it back. They look at the book on the ground to find that it was empty aside from a few doodles. The girl transfers out and is never seen again.]]** A girl becomes known for doing wiccan type stuff, which eventually leads to people asking her to put curses on other people. [[spoiler: While she was a nobody in the past, this gets her a lot of attention including from an ex bully. She starts doing requests for this girl. The ex bully eventually tells her to kill someone who was stalking her. The girl tries her hardest to kill this person using her curses, but it doesn't work (in universe the minions of Hell Girl realize that these were all coincidences in the first place ) and is put under a lot of pressure by the ex bully. The girl uses Hell Link to send the stalker to hell. The ex bully thanks her for finally coming through, only to reveal that the guy wasn't a stalker, that was just a lie to get her to curse him. He was actually just a guy that she found creepy. ]]* When it isn't featuring [[DownerEnding Downer Endings]] or [[CruelTwistEnding Cruel Twist Endings,]] ''Manga/ZekkyouGakkyuu'' is doing this.** In the story ''Supplements for the Brain,'' a young girl wishes to be as smart as her best friend, but no amount of studying seems to help. She finds a magazine ad promising a supplement that will boost brain power and make the user smarter without even trying. After she gets her pills, she is instructed to write down her progress daily, and above all, ''only take one pill a day.'' She follows suit at first, but when she overhears her classmates and friend wondering if perhaps her sudden good grades is a result of cheating, she takes an entire fistful of pills at once out of spite. The next day, she even surpasses her best friend in test scores and smugly rubs her face in it, thinking it's all thanks to the pills. [[spoiler: When she goes home that day, she finds a letter from the company, saying that she has broken instruction and they will be coming to collect her to run some tests on her brain. As she hides, terrified and alone, in her house, she receives a message from her friend, apologizing for thinking she was cheating and admitting that she was just really jealous because her friend made everything look effortless while ''she herself'' had to study all day. Realizing that she was wrong about her friend, and that she spitefully took the pills for nothing, the girl breaks down and does nothing as the company takes her to their labs to run tests on her brain--presumably forever.]]** In ''Kasako-san is Coming,'' two girls meet a ghost named Kasako-san, a spirit missing her umbrella who will kill anyone sees her in three days unless they present her with her umbrella. The girls spend three days looking for it and finally find it on the third day. But the girls are always competing with one another, tied in everything in their gym class, and each thinks that if ''they alone'' present the umbrella, the other will be killed and they won't have anymore competition. After a brief struggle, one girl successfully steals the umbrella from the other, leaving her to be spirited away by Kasako-san. [[spoiler: Then, some weeks later, that girl is stopped on her way to school by a ''new'' spirit missing an umbrella and willing to kill anyone who doesn't appease her--the friend she betrayed.]]* ''MahouGyoushouninRoma'' has these as its primary theme:** A boy is desperate to be the stand-out player on the basketball team, but is constantly in the shadow of the one other boy who is better than him. He buys a magical artifact allowing him to "erase" the other boy from history, thus becoming the best player himself. But [[spoiler:before he can play a game, he is erased by the former third-best player on the team, who is now in the same position.]]** A boy is desperate for a girl to fall in love with him, and buys a magical card that will guarantee her love if he passes it to her. He hides the card in a bundle of books to give to her unnoticed, and they fall in love.. except [[spoiler:she was already in love with him, and passed him a similar card just beforehand.]]** Just when you think they're becoming TheUntwist or {{Cruel Twist Ending}}s, though, a poor boy buys a magical coin which gives a 50:50 chance of the bearer having exceptional luck or facing disaster. Having won a motorcycle with his luck, but then had a family member injured on a bad flip, he tries to distance himself from it; but his sister discovers the coin, flips it, and is interrupted when [[spoiler:he ''throws it in the ocean'', saying the risk to others isn't worth the chance of a magical break. This shocks ''Roma'', as the magical energy she normally drained from the Aesop victims is instead lost. And the final frame shows the coin lying at the bottom of the ocean - luck side up.]][[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]* In the 70's, DC had a short lived comic called ''Plop!'', in which a crew of ghoulish looking folks present stories, all of which end have that kind of ending. For example, a kindly old man is actually a secret grave robber who visits funerals only to inventory the jewelry of the deceased. But when the doctor tells him his time is coming, he's frantic to avoid the same treatment at the hands of his apprentice. So he stipulates that he be buried only in everyday clothes. Alas, he forgot that a dentist who believed the man's public image had given him a free overhaul. And in the last scene, the apprentice is happily bashing out the gold teeth from the old man's corpse. After each story, the presenters cackle over the misfortunes of the characters before going on to the next story. Naturally, at the end of each issue, something goes "Plop!" on the presenters as well.** This particular variant (hideous narrators and all) was a staple of pre-Comics Code Authority horror comics, particularly those published by EC.** Later comic series like ''ComicBook/HouseOfMystery'' did these out of nostalgia for the old EC horror lines like ''ComicBook/TalesFromTheCrypt'' and its sister titles, ''The Vault of Horror'', ''The Haunt of Fear'', and ''Shock Suspenstories''.* ''ComicBook/ThargsFutureShocks'' from ''ComicBook/TwoThousandAD'' typically ended with such a twist. If the main character is warmongering, bigoted, greedy, etc., you can be sure that something will come back to bite them by the end. One of the best, by Creator/AlanMoore, goes like this: A werewolf on a virtually eternal space flight to an off-world colony looking forward to feasting on everybody else on board whenever the spaceship passes a lunar body finding out the hard way that every passenger and crew member on the vessel [[FlockOfWolves is also a werewolf and was hoping to do the same thing]] (and Earth's space command post happy to know that they've finally figured out a way to get rid of all of the planet's werewolves).* A common appearance in Creator/ECComics, just a few examples (there were dozens in total) include:** In "The Trophy", a hunter who displays trophies of the heads of various animals he has killed is made into such a trophy himself when he is captured by a crazed man.** In "Half-Baked!" a cook who enjoys slowly broiling lobsters alive and later murders a lobsterman who he's been stealing from is in a car accident and burned alive.** In "Gone... Fishing!" a fisherman finds a candybar on the beach and bites into it, only to reveal that there's a hook inside. He soon finds himself being dragged into the ocean by a fishing line.** In "A Grim Fairy Tale" a pompous King and Queen forbid the townfolk from killing the rats that overwhelm the kingdom. Eventually an angry mob captures them, shoves live rats down their throats and sews their mouth shut, causing the rats to eat their way out of them.

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[[folder:Films -- Animation]]* Sid in ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory'' could count. He spends all his spare time sadistically destroying toys. [[spoiler: Once the toys rise up against him, he's too terrified to even look at his sister's doll.]]** Judging by the WordOfGod about his cameo in the third film, he eventually got over it.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]* The 1968 film ''Wild in the Streets'' has an ending that could be considered an example of this. [[spoiler: A group of twentysomethings and teens manages to exile everybody over 30 to retirement camps. Then at the end, a group of kids exiles everybody over 10.]]* [[DoubleSubversion Doubly subverted]] in ''Film/KindHeartsAndCoronets''. The story revolves around a man who attempts to become the Duke of Chalfont by murdering everyone in line to inherit the dukedom. [[spoiler: Then he gets sentenced to death for the one murder he ''didn't'' commit. Then he gets acquitted at the last moment, but ''then'', as he leaves the prison, he realizes that he left his memoirs--which describe the murders he actually committed--in his cell.]]* In ''Film/RightAtYourDoor'', after a biological weapon goes off, one guy hermetically seals his house and refuses to let anybody in, including his wife. In the end it turns out that the virus can infiltrate the house... and concentrates in there, so the government seals the house from the outside and kills the guy. His wife, being outside in fresh air, is implied to be treatable in the end.* ''Film/LayerCake'' ends with the protagonist, a cocaine dealer, having risen to become leader of his own gang, eliminated his rivals, and gotten the girl - and, as he gloats as he walks down the steps of his club, having done all this without ever revealing his name. Seconds later a minor character shoots him dead. NoHonorAmongThieves, dude.* ''Film/TalesFromTheHood'' ends with the trio of thuggish gang-members learning from their mortician host that "[[WelcomeToHell This... ain't no funeral home!]]"[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]* The short story "Those Three Wishes", by Judith Gorog, is a literal case of BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor. [[spoiler:The selfish and spoiled protagonist is granted a wish, and uses it to wish for 1000 more wishes. Later, when reminded of a test she forgot to study for, she facetiously blurts out "I wish I were dead."]]* Creator/RoaldDahl's ''The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar'' digresses to suggest "what a competent writer of fiction would have done" for the sake of a TwistEnding: to give Henry, who used his powers of XRayVision for personal gain, some inventive manner of KarmicDeath. In this suggested ending, Henry, feeling a pain in his chest, uses his X-Ray Vision to see all his internal organs and a blood clot slowly moving towards his heart. But Henry's story is not fiction ([[BasedOnAGreatBigLie or so]] [[LiteraryAgentHypothesis Dahl claims]]), so it must continue to the actual, not-so-dramatic ending. In fact, this kind of twist occurs in many if not most of Dahl's short stories.** Likewise, in ''William and Mary'', this trope gets pulled twice over; first, the titular JerkAss protagonist William dies, and Mary is happy, because he was an emotionally abusive spouse and now she'll be free of him. But then, it turns out that William volunteered for a science experiment that preserves his life as a BrainInAJar. And then it turns out that he can't really enforce his demands on her anymore, so while he's still alive, Mary feels no fear of him anymore, and resolves to enjoy her life and do all the things that William would prevent her from doing, [[AndIMustScream all while he's incapable of doing anything but helplessly watching as she defies his will]].* Creator/StephenKing's ''Literature/{{Thinner}}'' is also a pretty good example, if tending toward a CruelTwistEnding. Rather than a Monkey's Paw wish, the story revolves around a curse brought on largely by the main character's irresponsibility. In the end [[spoiler:his curse is removed and placed into a pie; whoever has a piece will be cursed. In what is possibly an even less responsible move, he leaves the pie in his own refrigerator overnight. When he finds that his wife (who he wanted to eat the pie) and daughter (who he very much ''didn't'' want to eat the pie) have eaten some, he says "to hell with it," and eats some too. The End.]]* "Literature/TheNecklace" by Creator/GuyDeMaupassant contains one of the best known examples in literature.* Another classical example is ''The Queen of Spades'' by Creator/AlexanderPushkin. The story concerns a young gambler who wishes to gain the secret magic formula of getting three good cards in a row from an elderly countess. After she refuses to tell him, he ends up threatening and frightening her to death, and is then visited by her ghost with the secret ([[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane probably in a nightmare]]). Wishing to marry his much wealthier sweetheart, he places all of his money on a bet. Magic formula works ([[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane probably by coincidence]]), but gambler loses everything because he picks the wrong card by mistake ([[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane or because he is cursed by the dead countess]]).* At least three ''Literature/{{Goosebumps}}'' books:** ''A Shocker On Shock Street'': The TV ending at least; the book ends on a CruelTwistEnding, as the two protagonists find out they're robots and are deactivated by the girl's "father" to be reprogrammed. In the TV episode, the two wake up again and decide to kill their creator after putting them through so much torment and trying to replace them with new versions.** ''Click'': The protagonist has abused the universal remote to suit his own ends. When he's confronted about this he tries to use the device against the accuser but it doesn’t work properly, so he presses the "off" button in frustration, and the entire world vanishes as he finds himself in a black void. Then the battery runs out.** ''The Cuckoo Clock of Doom'': The protagonist has been abused by his AnnoyingYoungerSibling all his life, with the biggest event being when she ''triggered'' the titular ArtifactOfDoom and caused him to come within an inch of being {{Ret Gone}}d out of existence. Luckily, he manages to set it back to normal -- but, because the clock is missing the year in which his sister was born, ''she'' is the one who winds up RetGone. Needless to say, although he says he'll "think about" bringing her back, he obviously settles for his new CloseEnoughTimeline.* In ''Literature/ThePictureOfDorianGray'': The protagonist's wish is granted and his painting ages and becomes ugly instead of him. This drives him to sin (which makes the portrait ugly), and when his IgnoredEpiphany doesn't make the painting uglier instead of more beautiful because of his vanity, he destroys the painting, inadvertedly killing himself. * In the short story "Silent Hostages'' by Paul Gallico, two criminals escape from prison and murder their way across the country. When they stop in a small, isolated town to take hostages, they soon find that [[spoiler:all of the citizens in town are mannequins. It is revealed that the town is about to be destroyed in the testing of a nuclear bomb which is going to be detonated in a few seconds. An extra layer of irony is added when it is revealed that they got into the town because the man who was supposed to be guarding it abandoned his post to comfort his dying wife in hospital after the criminals shot her and their children.]]* There is a Japanese fairy tale where a lazy man hears about an island of one-eyed men, so he decides to go there, kidnap one, and make a living from TheFreakshow. Turns out a two-eyed man is quite a freak show for the one-eyed men themselves...* In the short story "Give Her Hell" by Donald Wollheim, a man who abused his wife and daughter all the time makes a DealWithTheDevil to prevent his crimes from coming to light. He continues to beat up his wife, consigns his rebellious daughter to an asylum, with measures in place to keep her there after his death, and he thinks he got the better end of the deal by making the devil reincarnate him after his death. Only on his deathbed does he learn that there are certain rules about such reincarnations - the life must be one of a person already born. Also, the person must be related to him and of opposite gender. His daughter fits the bill perfectly.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]* Made famous by ''Series/TheTwilightZone1959'' (former TropeNamer), though, ironically, it's the episodes that ''avert'' this trope that tend to be remembered best (such as "Time Enough At Last" which is a CruelTwistEnding).** Averted in one of its most famous stories: "Literature/ItsAGoodLife", about a boy named Anthony [[AGodAmI with godlike powers.]] Arguably not as much, however, in "It's Still a Good Life", the sequel to the story in [[Series/TheTwilightZone2002 the 2002 series]]. Anthony has grown up and has a daughter named Audrey. She has powers similar to her father's, but she can also bring things ''back'' from "the cornfield." The remaining townspeople (including Anthony's mother) try to turn her against her father, but it backfires and she banishes them all from existence. Anthony winds up saddened by this development, so she brings ''everything'' back. The two plan a trip to UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity, as Anthony states Audrey did a "real good thing" - acknowledging he is less powerful than she is and had better think happy thoughts himself. [[TwistEnding The closing narration reveals that there was no moral. "Just an update from Peaksville, Ohio."]]** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZoneS1E6EscapeClause Escape Clause]]", a man granted immortality in a FaustianBargain, having accidentally killed his wife, casts it as a premeditated murder to see what the electric chair will do to him; his lawyer gets him a life sentence instead, and he calls on the Devil to collect rather than face centuries in prison.** In "[[Recap/TheTwilightZoneS1E15IShotAnArrowIntoTheAir I Shot an Arrow into the Air]]" the crew of a spaceship crashes on a hot, barren landscape with little hope of being rescued. One of the crew members, seeing that their water supplies are running low, kills the other surviving crew members to take their water. Then he finds out they weren't on a foreign world like they thought, but were actually in the Nevada desert, just a few miles from the road, and he breaks down upon realizing how pointless his actions were. The closing narration even refers to this twist as "A practical joke perpetrated by Mother Nature and a combination of improbable events, practical joke wearing the trappings of a nightmare of terror, of desperation."** "[[Recap/TheTwilightZoneS1E28ANicePlaceToVisit A Nice Place to Visit]]" had an interesting version of this: a bank robber is killed during one of his heists, and is happy to find himself where he gets everything he'd ever want, instead of "the other place" (i.e. hell). Trouble is, ''he gets everything he'd ever want'' and quickly grows bored. It turns out [[NoChallengeEqualsNoSatisfaction he can't do anything exciting (like rob a bank) because he'd always succeed.]] In frustration, he decides he doesn't belong in Heaven and asks to go to "the other place". The guide retorts [[spoiler: "Heaven? Whatever gave you the idea that you were in Heaven, Mr. Valentine? [[ThisIsntHeaven This]] ''[[ThisIsntHeaven is]]'' [[ThisIsntHeaven the other place!]]"]]* Early B&W ''Series/LostInSpace'' episode. Creepy skeletal star ship wreck contains a device which will grant all wishes. No-one seems to notice the surviving bulkhead and door in the back of the wreck. Too many wishes (or irresponsibility) result in the door slowly opening...* The revival series ''Series/TheOuterLimits1995'' did this fairly often, though not as much as the CruelTwistEnding.** In "New Lease", two scientists invent a device that can revive the dead. They test it on various cryogenically frozen animals, then a person, but they find that every test subject can only last a day before it dies again. When one of the scientists is killed by a mugger, his partner decides to bring him back so they can have one last day together. The revived scientist, unable to let go of his desire for revenge and feeling he has nothing to lose, wastes the day tracking down the mugger, ignoring his friend and his family. When he finds the mugger, he murders him in public. To his horror, he finds out that the problem all along was the cryogenic freezing; having been revived as a fresh corpse, he's going to get to live to be arrested for the murder and most likely sentenced to life in prison.** "Decompression" has a recently-elected senator aboard a plane that's going to crash. A time traveler tells him that he has to open the door and leap out, sacrificing the lives of all on board, so he can live to be elected President and usher in a new enlightenment, or else his opponent would be elected and become a ruthless tyrant. In the end, he jumps out with seconds to spare... whereupon the time traveler tells him that ''he'' was destined to become the tyrant, and lets him fall to his death while the plane lands safely.** "Skin Deep" has a nerdy guy gain a device that lets him change his appearance. He murders a handsome coworker and steals his identity, reveling in his new popularity and hot girlfriend and letting it all go to his head. Some mob enforcers whom the handsome coworker apparently had dealings with and cheated murder him.** "Second Thoughts" has a guy regularly murder people and use a device to absorb their memories and intelligence. He is greedy for knowledge. He makes the mistake of absorbing the mind of a suicidal artist, which causes him to go crazy and shoot himself in the head.** "Bits of Love" has a nuclear war survivor living in a bunker with holograms for companionship. Even though the holograms think and feel emotion like him, he treats them with incredible disrespect, saying things such as that they are not real so their opinions don't matter. In the end, the holograms reprogram themselves to completely ignore him and create a holographic society for themselves. The man lasts about a minute before he cracks from loneliness.** "To Tell The Truth" has a discredited scientist discover that his newly-founded colony is about to be wiped out by a solar flare. Given that his discrediting was due to a prediction of volcanic activity that caused the colony to be moved at great expense but failed to occur, [[CassandraTruth no one believes him]] except his assistant and his mentor. He keeps on raising a fuss, until the colony's security chief reveals that evidence was found of an indigenous alien race when the colony was set up on the most valuable land on the planet - and not only accuses the scientist of being a shape-shifting saboteur trying to break up the colony, but condemns him with a DNA test that shows bizarre readings. He is then imprisoned and threatened with dissection, but the assistant, holding one last ounce of trust in her mentor, meets him in secret and tests him again to reveal that he is in fact human. As time is running out, the scientist, mentor and assistant attempt to escape the planet in the single emergency shuttle - and the scientist is mauled to death by a crazed mob while ensuring the escape of his two supporters. Afterward, the security chief mourns the scientist, and is mocked by the colony administrator for caring about an alien. The chief then reveals that ''he'' is the alien saboteur - ''he used his own DNA to fake the test'' - and states that it's ironic that the scientist, the only human in the colony he wished he could have spared for being "the gentlest of you", was the first to die, and at the hands of other humans - and then the solar flare hits, wiping out the colony and triggering the rebirth of the alien civilization.** "Family Values" has Tom Arnold play a workaholic, neglectful dad. He's annoyed by all the stuff his family wants him to do that keeps piling up while he spends nights and weekends with his boss and clients, so after being (deservedly) relegated to the couch by his wife, he sees an infomercial for a servant robot called the 'Gideon 4000.' He orders one for no money down. Initially, his family is creeped out, but the robot looks out for them and they grow to like it. However, after Tom Arnold sees the thing teaching his son how to play baseball, he sees it as moving in on his family. He can't return it without his wife's signature, which she won't grant. After an unsuccessful attempt to destroy it, the robot points out that he's become nothing but a money faucet because of his neglectfulness and that he's easily disposed of. The episode ends with the dad meekly apologizing to Gideon for forgetting to wear a tie to dinner and a montage shot of several families sitting down to dinner with their Gideon robots.* ''Series/TalesFromTheCrypt'':** In the episode "Top Billing," a struggling actor played by Creator/JonLovitz competes with his more handsome and successful former rival for a role in a production of ''{{Hamlet}}''. When his rival is chosen for the role based purely on his looks, Lovitz's character murders him, and in his absence is accepted to fill in his role... which the murderous director reveals it to be the role of [[AlasPoorYorick Yorick's]] skull.** A similar example happens in the episode "Beauty Rest" where a would-be pageant queen murders a rival in order to win the contest ... only to discover that it's "Miss Autopsy" where the winner is eviscerated and displayed for the audience.** In "Dead Right", a GoldDigger marries a hideous and abusive man after being told by a fortune teller that he will inherit a large amount of money and then die. This turns out to be a ProphecyTwist - the woman wins the money and then tells her husband she's leaving. He murders her in a rage and then inherits her winnings right before being executed for the murder.** "Easel Kill Ya", with Creator/TimRoth as an artist who creates paintings using material from recently killed people. When his girlfriend finds out, she gets struck down by a car and needs a life-saving, expensive operation. The artist tells the hospital staff to get the specialist who can perform it. When his benefactor demands another painting to pay for the hospital fee, he murders a passer-by to create it. Too bad the guy he killed was the specialist, just as the cops find his casually discarded paintbrush.* In an episode of ''Series/{{Angel}}'', the Fang Gang rescues a woman who was newly changed into a werewolf from a group of people who consider the flesh of newly turned werewolf a delicacy. When she bites TheMole scientist as Angel is taking her away, Angel dryly comments that, now all they have to do is wait a month. The scientist begins pleading for his life as the mooks take him away.* ''Series/{{Medium}}'':** In one episode, the [[MonsterOfTheWeek Villain of the Week]] had a particularly clever method of killing his victims: he would strike them with the faucet taken from their own bathtub, then use plastic sheeting to transfer their bodies to the tub so as to avoid leaving any blood in the house, replace the faucet, and turn the water on, [[MakeItLookLikeAnAccident making it appear that they had simply slipped in the shower and hit their head]]. Even though Alison ''knows'' he did it and has convinced the District Attorney of it, no one can arrest the guy because he's simply too good and leaves no evidence that it was anything but a tragic accident. While he escapes to a tropical country and seems to have gotten away with it all, [[spoiler:the universe sees fit to ensure that not only does ''he'' slip and bash his own head in the next time he takes a shower (in the only legitimate "accident" he was ever involved in), but also takes care to inform Alison of it in her dreams.]] Needless to say, both she and the audience are happy that things have been sorted out.** In another, an evil medium begins interfering with Alison's dreams, preventing her from helping people as she normally does - he claims he's simply "keeping the balance" because Alison's precognition is an unfair advantage, but he's really just evil. [[spoiler:In the end, the ghosts of all the people he stopped Alison from helping come after him, because if he hadn't interfered, they'd still be alive (and unable to harm him).]]* A few episodes of ''Series/TheHauntingHour'' had this ending. Although the show favored the CruelTwistEnding because it had more scares, this ending did pop up in the episodes that revolved around {{Jerkass}} protagonists. In "Wrong Number", a girl named [[AlphaBitch Steffani]] loves to bully others, including ''an old lady'' who lives next door to her apartment. In the end, said old lady turns out to be a witch and the grandmother of one of the kids she bullied. She punishes Steffani by trapping her in her own phone as a video. The witch sends the video to her granddaughter and she promptly deletes it. [[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]* The lyrics in Music/OzzyOsbourne's "Trapdoor" (from his 2010 album ''Scream'') seem to talk about someone that fell victim to his own hubris (and the Nemesis that comes with it).[[/folder]]

[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]* Spoofed in a ''ComicStrip/BloomCounty'' story arc. Oliver invents a device that turns people black (as in, of African descent) and tests it on an unwitting Steve Dallas. A couple of strips later, Steve finally noticed and, when talking to Binkley, theorizes that it's a ''Twilight Zone''-style event where he was turned black in return for his occasional racism. The strip ends with Steve searching the bushes for Rod Serling.[[/folder]]

[[folder: Video Games]]* ''Franchise/MassEffect'': The fate of the Reapers' creators certainly qualifies. As arrogant, godlike tyrants, they became worried their slave races would produce AIs that would destroy them, [[ItsAllAboutMe and therefore stop producing tribute.]] Assuming that the concerns of "lesser species" did not apply to them, they [[WhatAnIdiot built a considerably more powerful AI and gave it WEAPONS to try and solve the problem.]] Unsurprisingly, the AI soon concluded they were part of the problem and massacred them, and went on to create the cycle of extinction to justify the circular logic that got its creators killed.* The finale of ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoIV''. At the finale, Niko is ordered by the mob boss he works for to do a large drug deal with Dmitri Rascalov, the primary antagonist of the game to that point. However, Dmitri's location is revealed, allowing Niko to instead get revenge on him. Roman, Niko's cousin, and Kate, Niko's girlfriend, will strongly suggest those respective options. But whichever one you choose, the character that suggested it will be murdered at Roman's wedding the subsequent mission. * ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'' has one of these if you [[spoiler:go for the GoldenEnding after getting the KillEmAll ending]]. Without that context, it'd be a CruelTwistEnding, but given that you [[spoiler:sought out and killed every monster you could find, destroyed the world when you ran out, and then sold your SOUL to avoid the consequences]], you can't exactly claim it came out of nowhere that [[spoiler:the Fallen Child you sold your SOUL ''to'' takes over the protagonist's body and is heavily implied to KillEmAll again, this time without you]].** You can get one in [[spoiler:the KillEmAll ending if you choose not to destroy the world. If you do, the Fallen Child kills ''you'', then destroys the world anyway (the former [[DeathIsCheap doesn't stick]]; the latter does). ]] [[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]* The artist of ''Webcomic/CtrlAltDel'' notes that this was what he intended with his conclusion to the main comic story. Ethan spent most of the comic making horribly dangerous and stupid decisions, so it was inevitable one or more would finally catch up with him. A time machine he built is used to show Ethan a BadFuture that came about solely due to his creation of Zeke. Before he can be [[SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong sent back to stop it]] the machine overloads, forcing Ethan to commit a HeroicSacrifice.** Also happens in some of the story branches of his Space Archaeologist pick-your-adventure arcs.[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]* This trope was more than once parodied on ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'''s ''[[ShowWithinAShow The Scary Door]]'':-->'''Guy:''' Finally! Solitude! I can read books for all eternity! (glasses fall off) It's not fair! IT'S NOT FAIR! Wait, my eyes aren't that bad. I can still read the large print books. (eyes fall out) IT'S NOT... Well, lucky I know how to read Braille. (hands fall off, screams, tongue falls out, head falls off) Hey, look at that weird mirror!\\'''Bender''': Cursed by his own hubris.** A second ''Scary Door'' segment piles on one nonsensical twist after another (most of which based on real ''Twilight Zone'' episodes); a professional gambler is hit by a car and wakes up in front of a slot machine. He keeps on winning and believes himself to be in heaven, but when he realises winning all the time is boring, he realises [[ThisIsntHeaven he is in hell]]... Until a man arrives, pulls back a curtain and reveals he is in fact on an airplane. The gambler notices a gremlin on the wing and tries to tell the man, who simply replies "Why should I believe you? You're [[UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler Hitler]]!" and holds up a mirror to reveal that the gambler has transformed into Hitler. He then begs Eva Braun, who is sitting next to him for help, but she pulls off a mask to reveal she has the head of a fly. Cutting back to the characters watching the TV show, Bender nonchalantly says "Saw it coming."** And in another:---> '''MadScientist''': I have combined the DNA of the world's most evil animals to make the most evil creature of them all!\\'''Creature''': ''(completely deadpan)'' [[spoiler: [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters Turns out it's Man.]]]]** Then there's this parody:---> '''Narrator''': [[Literature/TheWarOfTheWorlds In the end, it wasn't guns or bombs that defeated the aliens, but that humblest of God's creatures]]... the ''Tyrannosaurus Rex''.** A later episode had a BrilliantButLazy scientist invent a robot to do all his work and fulfill his social obligations. When the robot starts winning Nobel Prizes and the love of the scientist's family:--->'''Scientist:''' If only I'd ordered the robot to make me [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor be more careful with what I wished for!]] [[HypocriticalHumor Robot, experience this]] [[DramaticIrony crushing irony]] [[HypocriticalHumor for]] [[IgnoredEpiphany me]].\\'''Robot (falling to knees):''' ''[[BigNo NOOOOOOOOO!!]]''\\''(The scientist sips a beer and sighs contentedly.)''* In the "Wasted Talent" episode of ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'' where Peter had to get drunk to play the piano, the final scene shows his solitary bookworm brain cell in despair after breaking his glasses, alluding to the ''Twilight Zone'' episode "Time Enough at Last."* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' took a twist on the ''Twilight Zone'' episode "A Kind of a Stopwatch" in "Treehouse of Horror XIV". Bart and Milhouse find a stop watch that stops time, make mischief, and break the watch. ''Unlike'' the ''Twilight Zone'' episode, they are able to repair the watch using a guide--and they take ''15 years'' to fix it.* In an episode of ''WesternAnimation/DaveyAndGoliath'', Davey's friend Jimmy rushes past an injured girl in order to collect a "Good Neighbor" balloon at a festival. Davey stops to help the girl and as a result doesn't receive his balloon. The episode concludes with Jimmy boasting that he's a good neighbor since he has the balloon to prove it-- and to his dismay the balloon pops right in his face.[[/folder]]----